Program
ΤΑΙΝΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΤΗΣ ΕΛΛΑΔΟΣ, ΜΙΚΡΗ ΛΕΣΧΗ (ΚΑΝΑΡΗ 1) - ΦΡΑΟΥΛΕΣ ΚΑΙ ΑΙΜΑ
Twenty-eight-year old Stuart Hagman's first film, that caused a stir at the Cannes Festival in 1970, is about the student uprising at Berkeley University.
"One has to get back to those years to understand the passion and enthusiasm of the politically 'innocent' Americans who came into conflict with the state. It was a confrontation that was the outcome of the awakening of the American conscience under the catalytic effect of the Vietnam War", the programme says.
Apart from its value as a documentary, the film is a low-profile, fresh approach to the event, seen from a hero's perspective, a young man "in the know", who is also initiated into love and politics in the manner of "Voltaire's Candide". Therefore, the film served as an interpretation key for the understanding of a political culture that is different from the European.
It is worth noting that the film was banned by the dictatorial regime, as in the case of Woodstock.
- Cinema ΤΑΙΝΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΤΗΣ ΕΛΛΑΔΟΣ, ΜΙΚΡΗ ΛΕΣΧΗ (ΚΑΝΑΡΗ 1)
- Pages 1, FLYER
- Τόπος Έκδοσης ATHENS
- Language GREEK, MODERN (1453 - )
- Height 29,5 CM
- Width 21 CM
- Paper Type ΒΙΟΜΗΧΑΝΙΚΟ
- Status ΠΟΛΥ ΚΑΛΗ